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2010 SURVEY OF:
HOSPITAL EMGERGENCY DEPARTMENT
ADMINISTRATORS
200 Corporate Drive | Lafayette, LA 70508 | 800-893-9698
www.schumachergroup.com
EMERGENCY DEPARTMENT
CHALLENGES AND TRENDS
2
EMERGENCY DEPARTMENT CHALLENGES AND
TRENDS
2010 SURVEY OF:
HOSPITAL EMGERGENCY DEPARTMENT ADMINISTRATORS
IN THIS REPORT:
INTRODUCTION .................................................................................................. 3
METHODOLOGY ................................................................................................. 4
SUMMARY STATEMENT ..................................................................................... 4
KEY FINDINGS OF THE SURVEY ................................................................... 5-13
TRENDS AND OBSERVATIONS ................................................................... 14-16
CONCLUSION .................................................................................................... 17
3
The nation’s hospital emergency departments (EDs) play a
vital and increasingly important role in providing healthcare to some 120 million patient visitors
every year. Emergency departments serve as the front line of care for the injured and severely
ill, and often are the only accessible source of care for uninsured patients or those who
otherwise lack access to medical services. By virtue of the Emergency Medical Treatment and
Labor Act (EMTALA), the federal law obliging hospital personnel to see all patients who present
to the emergency department, hospital emergency departments are the de facto healthcare
safety net for millions of patients throughout the country.
Schumacher Group, one of the largest emergency department management firms in the United
States, is committed to tracking challenges and trends affecting hospital emergency
departments. In an effort to monitor strategic, operational and staffing issues of importance to
emergency medicine delivery, Schumacher Group conducts periodic surveys of emergency
department administrators nationwide.
EMERGENCY DEPARTMENT CHALLENGES AND TRENDS, 2010 SURVEY OF HOSPITAL EMERGENCY
DEPARTMENT ADMINISTRATORS reflects how hospital emergency department administrators
view a variety of emerging concerns and ongoing issues. In particular, the survey
examines how hospital emergency department administrators believe health reform will
affect quality and access to care at hospital emergency departments.
Additional issues examined in the survey include the impact of the shortage of specialty
physicians available to cover the emergency department, the impact of electronic medical
records on the emergency department, and the inability of some emergency departments to
treat patients in a timely manner. The survey further asks emergency department managers to
rank their priorities and concerns for the next 12 months.
The survey is offered as an informational resource for healthcare professionals who monitor
hospital quality, staffing and strategic trends, and also may be of interest to policy makers,
journalists and members of the public interested in the quality and accessibility of healthcare
services provided in the hospital setting.
ABOUT SCHUMACHER GROUP
SCHUMACHER GROUP PROVIDES CONTINUOUSLY
IMPROVING QUALITY HEALTH CARE TO ALL PATIENTS IN A
COST EFFECTIVE MANNER AND MAINTAINS THE HIGHEST
ETHICAL STANDARDS BY UPHOLDING THE PATIENTS’
RIGHTS, TREATING THEM WITH DIGNITY AND RESPECT.
INTRODUCTION
Founded in 1994, Schumacher Group is one of the three largest emergency department
management firms in the United States. Schumacher Group is responsible for the clinical
staffing and operation of over 180 acute care hospital emergency departments, providing
care to over three million emergency department patients annually. A physician owned and
mission-driven company, Schumacher Group is dedicated to enhancing the quality and
accessibility of emergency medical care nationwide. More information about Schumacher
Group is available at www.schumachergroup.com.
4
Throughout June, July and August of 2010, Schumacher Group’s 2010 Survey of Emergency
Department Administrators was sent by mail to approximately 6,075 hospital emergency
department administrators/managers in 50 states. Of those mailed, approximately 4,049 also
received the survey via email.
Six hundred and three completed surveys were received by September, 2010, yielding a
response rate of 10%.
Schumacher Group’s 2010 Survey of Emergency Department Administrators suggests that
health reform, though providing medical insurance to over 30 million previously uninsured
patients, will not decrease patient visits to hospital emergency departments. Indeed, most
hospital emergency department administrators indicated the reverse will be true and that
patient volume at their facilities will increase as health reform is implemented. The majority
believe their emergency departments will see more patients unable to access primary care and
specialists post-reform than they did prior to reform. Most emergency department
administrators also believe that lack of physician specialists available to cover the emergency
department poses risks to emergency department patients – a “very significant risk” in some
cases.
While most hospitals have invested in electronic medical records (EMR) in their emergency
departments, the majority of emergency department administrators indicated that to date the
investment has not been worth the cost. Of the various concerns facing emergency department
administrators over the next 12 months, reimbursement issues are deemed the most
important, followed by health reform.
The great majority of emergency department administrators indicated their facilities are at
times unable to transfer mental/behavioral health patients to inpatient facilities in a timely
manner. This poses risks to patients and underlines a growing crisis in mental healthcare in
which hospital emergency departments must “house” mental health patients who have few or
no inpatient options.
METHODOLOGY
SUMMARY STATEMENT
5
The majority of hospital emergency department (ED) administrators (66%) believe health
reform will cause patient volume at their EDs to increase, while only 5% believe ED
patient volume will decrease because of health reform.
64% of ED administrators said that due to health reform their EDs will see more patients
who cannot access primary care doctors in a timely manner. Only 7% said their EDs will
see fewer patients who cannot access a primary care physician in a timely manner due to
health reform.
55% of ED administrators said that due to health reform their EDs will see more patients
who cannot access specialist physicians in a timely manner. Only 3% said their EDs will
see fewer patients who cannot access a specialist physician in a timely manner due to
health reform.
Close to three-fourths of ED administrators (74%) indicated that lack of specialist
physicians available to cover the ED posed at least a moderate risk to patients at their
facilities. 38% indicated that lack of specialist coverage posed either a significant risk to
patients or a very significant risk.
ED administrators cited orthopedic surgeons and neurosurgeons as the types of
specialists providing coverage in their facilities in shortest supply, followed by
neurologists, cardiologists, general surgeons, otolaryngologists and cardiovascular
surgeons.
About one-third of ED administrators (36%) pay specialists to provide coverage to their
EDs.
The majority of ED administrators (at least 70%) believe reimbursement from Medicaid,
Medicare and commercial insurance to their EDs will decrease under health reform.
The great majority of ED administrators (86%) indicated they are often or sometimes
unable to transfer mental/behavioral patients to inpatient facilities in a timely manner.
Over 70% of ED administrators report mental/behavioral patients boarding for 24 hours
or longer. 10% said they have boarding times for mental/behavioral patients as long as
one week or more.
60% of ED administrators believe patient care at their EDs has been compromised due to
delays in transferring mental/behavioral patients to inpatient facilities.
While 73% of ED administrators said their hospital has invested in electronic medical
records in the ED, 56% said that to date the investment has not been worth the cost.
However, 76% said that eventually the investment would justify the cost.
Uncompensated care and reimbursement for services rank as the two issues of most
importance to ED administrators over the next 12 months, followed by health reform.
KEY FINDINGS OF THE SURVEY
6
24%
23%
7%
23%
23%
0-9,000
9,001-16,000
16,001-20,000
20,001-40,000
17%
19%
28%
51-100
100-200
66%5%
17%
12%
Volume will
increase
Volume will
decrease
Volume will
remain the same
Unsure
0-50 36%
51-100 17%
100-200 19%
201 or more 28%
States participating were:
TX 11% GA 3% NE 2% NM 1% MS 1%
CA 5% IA 3% WI 2% SD 1% WV 1%
IL 5% MN 3% AR 2% UT 1% ND 0%
LA 5% PA 3% MD 1% NH 1% ME 0%
NC 4% OK 2% OR 1% SC 1% HI 0%
OH 3% IN 2% WA 1% VA 1% NV 0%
MO 3% NY 2% CO 1% WY 1% RI 0%
AL 3% NJ 2% TN 1% MA 1%
FL 3% KS 2% AZ 1% CT 1%
MI 3% KY 2% MT 1% ID 1%
0-9,000 24%
9,001-16,000 23%
16,001-20,000 7%
20,001-40,000 23%
Greater than 40,000 23%
Patient volume will increase 66%
Patient volume will decrease 5%
Patient volume will remain the same 17%
Unsure 12%
QUESTIONS ASKED AND RESPONSES RECEIVED
1. Number of beds at your hospital?
2. State in which your facility is located?
3. How many patients do you see in your Emergency Department per year?
4. Consider the new health care reform law. How do you believe reform will affect
patient volume at your ED?
7
9%
10%
64%
17%
Quality of care will
improve
Quality of care will
decline
Quality of care will
remain the same
Unsure
22%
43%
19%
16%
More uninsured patients
in our ED
Fewer uninsured
patients in our ED
No change in number of
uninsured patients in ED
Unsure
26%
33%
26%
7%
3%
0-10% Uninsured
11-20% Uninsured
21-30% Uninsured
31-40% Uninsured
41-50% Uninsured
51-60% Uninsured
61-70% Uninsured
71-80% Uninsured
81-90% Uninsured
N/A
30%
70%
Agree
Disagree
Quality of care will
improve
9%
Quality of care will decline 10%
Quality of care will
remain the same
64%
Unsure 17%
0-10% 26%
11-20% 33%
21-30% 26%
31-40% 7%
41-50% 3%
51-60% 2%
61-70% 1%
71-80% 1%
81-90% <1%
N/A 1%
Will see more uninsured patients in our ED 22%
Will see fewer uninsured patients in our ED 43%
There will be little to no change in the
number of uninsured patients we see
19%
Unsure 16%
Agree 30%
Disagree 70%
5. How do you believe health reform will affect quality of care delivered by your ED?
6. What percent of patients presenting to your ED are uninsured?
7. How do you believe this number will change as health reform is implemented?
8. A recent study suggests that uninsured patients DO NOT use the ER more than
insured patients. Do you agree or disagree?
8
39%
2%45%
14%
ED physicians will be
harder to find
ED physicians will be
easier to find
No change in our ability
to find ED physicians
Unsure
50%
34%
16%
Will increase our use of
mid-levels
Will have no effect on
our use of mid-levels
Will decrease our use of
mid-levels
Unsure
64%7%
21%
8%
We will see more patients who
cannot access primary care
physicians
We will see fewer patients who
cannot access primary care
physicians
There will be no change
Unsure
55%
3%
32%
10%
We will see more patients
who cannot access specialist
physicians
We will see fewer patients
who cannot access specialist
physicians
There will be no change
Unsure
ED physicians will be harder to find 39%
ED physicians will be easier to find 2%
There will be no change in our
ability to find ED physicians
45%
Unsure 14%
Will increase our use of mid-levels 50%
Will have no effect on our
use of mid-levels
34%
Will decrease our use of
mid-levels
<1%
Unsure 16%
We will see more
patients who cannot access
primary care physicians
64%
We will see fewer
patients who cannot access
primary care physicians
7%
There will be no change 21%
Unsure 8%
We will see more
patients who cannot access
specialist physicians
55%
We will see fewer
patients who cannot access
specialist physicians
3%
There will be no change 32%
Unsure 10%
9. How do you believe health reform will affect your facility’s ability to find physicians
for the ED?
10. How will health reform affect staffing of mid-level practitioners (NPs and PAs) in your
ED?
11. Some patients come to the ED because they cannot access PRIMARY CARE physicians
in a timely manner. How do you believe health reform will affect this trend at your
ED?
12. Some patients come to the ED because they cannot access SPECIALIST physicians in a
timely manner. How do you believe health reform will affect this trend at your ED?
9
12%
26%
36%
22%
4%
Very significant risk
Significant risk
Moderate risk
Minimal risk
No risk
19%
18%
17%11%
9%
9%
7%5%6%
Orthopedic surgeons
Neurosurgeons
Neurologists
Cardiologists
General surgeons
Otolaryngologists
Other
Cardiovascular surgeons
None, all coverage needs met
36%
64%
Yes
No
52%
3%
45%
More
Less
The same
Very significant risk 12%
Significant risk 26%
Moderate risk 36%
Minimal risk 22%
No risk 4%
Orthopedic surgeons 19%
Neurosurgeons 18%
Neurologists 17%
Cardiologists 11%
General surgeons 9%
Otolaryngologists 9%
Other 7%
Cardiovascular surgeons 5%
None, all coverage needs met 6%
Yes 36%
No 64%
More 52%
Less 3%
The same 45%
13. Rate the level of risk that lack of specialty coverage poses to patients in your ED.
14. Which types of specialist coverage is in the shortest supply at your facility? Pick
TWO ONLY.
15. Do you currently pay specialists to cover the ED?
16. If yes, with the implementation of health reform, do you expect to pay specialist
physicians more, less or the same amount to cover your ED?
10
73%
27%
Yes
No
44%
56%
Yes
No
76%
24%Yes
No
Yes 73%
No 27%
Yes 44%
No 56%
Yes 76%
No 24%
Reimbursement will
increaseWill decrease Will stay the same
Medicaid 5% 75% 20%
Medicare 12% 74% 14%
Commercial insurance 6% 70% 24%
0%10%20%30%40%50%60%70%80%
17. Under health reform, where do you anticipate reimbursement to your ED is heading
for the following payors?
18. Has your hospital invested in electronic medical records within the ED?
19. If yes, has your return on investment TO THIS DATE been worth the cost?
20. Do you believe your return on EMR investment will EVENTUALLY be worth the cost?
11
0% 20% 40% 60% 80%
56%30%
11%
3%
We are often unable to do so
We are sometimes unable to do so
We are rarely unable to do so
We are always able to transfer
mental/behavioral patients in a
timely manner
0% 20% 40% 60% 80%
0% 20% 40% 60% 80%
0% 20% 40% 60% 80%
0% 20% 40% 60% 80%
EMR reduces length of stay in our ED:
EMR improves provider efficiency within our ED:
EMR improves overall quality within our ED:
Agree 72%
Disagree 28%
EMR improves patient satisfaction within our ED:
Agree 31%
Disagree 69%
EMR reduces cost of care within our ED:
Agree 33%
Disagree 67%
We are often unable
to do so
56%
We are sometimes
unable to do so
30%
We are rarely unable
to do so
11%
We are always able
to transfer mental/behavioral
patients in a timely manner
3%
Agree 33%
Disagree 67%
Agree 60%
Disagree 40%
21. Please indicate whether you agree or disagree with the following statements
regarding the impact of EMR within your ED.
22. Are there times when your facility is UNABLE to transfer mental/behavioral patients
to inpatient facilities in a timely manner?
12
29%
30%
20%
11%
10%
12 hours or less
24 hours
2 days
5 days
>1 week
32%
28%
40%
Yes, for mental patients only
Yes, for all patients
No
12 hours or less 29%
24 hours 30%
2 days 20%
5 days 11%
>1 week 10%
Yes, for mental patients only 32%
Yes, for all patients 28%
No 40%
Most
important
Somewhat Least
Uncompensated care 72% 25% 3%
Reimbursement for services 78% 19% 3%
Health reform 43% 48% 9%
Shortage of nurses in the ED 35% 45% 20%
Length of patient stay in the ED 34% 44% 22%
Lack of specialty physician coverage 30% 46% 24%
Overcrowding of ED 36% 37% 27%
Poor public image of the department 35% 36% 29%
EMR implementation 28% 37% 35%
Shortage of ED physicians 25% 39% 36%
ED physician competence 34% 34% 32%
EMTALA compliance investigation 18% 36% 46%
23. What are the LONGEST boarding times for mental/behavioral patients at your
facility?
24. Is patient care ever compromised at your facility due to delays in transferring
mental/behavioral patients to inpatient facilities?
25. How would you rank the following concerns/priorities facing your ED in the next
12 months?
13
Uncompensated care
Reimbursement for services
Health reformShortage of
nurses in the ED
Length of patient stay in
the ED
Lack of specialty physician coverage
Overcrowding of ED
Poor public image of the department
EMR implementati
on
Shortage of ED physicians
ED physician competence
EMTALA compliance
investigation
Most important 72% 78% 43% 35% 34% 30% 36% 35% 28% 25% 34% 18%
Somewhat 25% 19% 48% 45% 44% 46% 37% 36% 37% 39% 34% 36%
Least 3% 3% 9% 20% 22% 24% 27% 29% 35% 36% 32% 46%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
93%
7%
Would choose my
hospital’s ED
Would go elsewhere
Ranking of concerns/priorities facing EDs in the next 12 months:
Would choose my hospital’s ED 93%
Would go elsewhere 7%
26. If you were seriously hurt and had a variety of options to choose from, would you
go to your own hospital’s ED, or would you choose to go elsewhere in hopes of
obtaining better care?
14
About two-thirds of those
surveyed (66%) said that
health reform will cause
patient volume in their
emergency departments
to increase.
Schumacher Group’s 2010 Survey of Hospital Emergency Department Administrators highlights
a number of issues of concern to those who manage the nation’s hospital emergency
departments. It also touches on trends of importance to the millions of patients who visit
hospital emergency departments each year. Among these is the question of access to the
emergency department, which, like many other facets of healthcare delivery, is likely to be
influenced by healthcare reform. This issue, and several others highlighted by the survey, is
addressed below.
HEALTHCARE REFORM AND PATIENT VOLUME
___________________________________________________
Under ideal circumstances, hospital emergency departments (EDs) would serve only those
patients who are injured or seriously ill. Because circumstances are not ideal, however, EDs see
a wide variety of patients, both emergent and the non-emergent, insured and uninsured. By law,
hospital personnel must see all patients who present to the ED, regardless of health status or
ability to pay. As a result, the ED has become a default option for patients without insurance
and for those who may have insurance but may lack immediate or convenient access to care.
Partly for this reason, the number of annual ED visits in the United States has grown in recent
years, from 90.3 million in 1996 to 119 million in 2006.*
One of the goals of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (i.e., “health reform”) is to
decrease the ranks of the uninsured and thereby reduce the number of patients seeking the
relatively expensive option of care in the ED.
The 2010 Survey of Hospital Emergency Department Administrators suggests that the majority
of ED administrators do not believe this will take place and that the opposite will occur. About
two-thirds of those surveyed (66%) said that health reform will cause patient volume in their
emergency departments to increase. Only 5% said that health reform will cause patient volume
at their EDs to decrease.
The assumption ED administrators appear to be making is that
health reform will not increase access to non-emergent care
even though it may increase access to healthcare insurance. It
can be foreseen that the newly insured will seek care, only find
long lines at physician offices. They will then turn to the ED in
even greater numbers. This pattern was evident in
Massachusetts after the 2006 passage of a health reform bill
that in many ways is a model for national health reform. ED
visits in Massachusetts grew by 7% between 2005 and 2007,
according to one study, while ED visits at Boston-area hospitals
also grew from 2006 to 2008 despite a drop in the number of
uninsured.**
Most ED administrators (64%) said their facilities will see more patients who cannot access
primary care physicians in a timely manner due to health reform, while over half (55%) said their
facilities will see more patients who cannot see a specialist in a timely manner due to health
reform. As a consequence, the survey suggests some ED administrators believe demand for ED
physicians will increase and recruiting ED physicians will be more difficult. Thirty-nine percent
of those surveyed said finding physicians for the ED will be harder due to health reform, while
only 2% said finding physicians for the ED will be easier. In response, many administrators (50%)
said that they will increase the use of mid-level practitioners such as physician assistants and
nurse practitioners at their facilities.
*Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
**Boston Globe, April 24, 2009
TRENDS AND OBSERVATIONS
15
THE SHORTAGE OF SPECIALISTS
____________________________
The shortage of primary care physicians has been
widely documented and is one reason why a
growing number of patients are turning to the ED
for care. However, there also is a growing shortage
of physicians in a variety of specialties, making it
more difficult for hospitals to find specialists ready
or willing to cover the ED. Over one-third of ED
administrators surveyed (36%) are paying
specialists to cover the ED, and a growing number
of hospitals are employing specialists in part to
ensure ED coverage.
Nevertheless, the great majority of those surveyed (86%) said that lack of specialty coverage of
their EDs poses at least a “moderate risk” to patients, while 38% said lack of specialty coverage
poses a “significant risk” or a “very significant” risk to patients. When specialists are not
available to treat injured or severely ill patients, such patients may have to be transferred to
other facilities, often losing the “golden hour” during which treatment of emergency patients is
most effective. Lack of ED specialty coverage can lead to patient complications and even death.
ED administrators were asked to identify the types of specialists in shortest supply at their
facilities. Orthopedic surgeons and neurosurgeons, who often are called upon to treat trauma
patients, were at the top of the list, followed by cardiologists, general surgeons,
otolaryngologists and cardiovascular surgeons.
THE CRISIS IN MENTAL HEALTH
____________________________________________________
Hospital EDs can serve as a barometer for wider trends in healthcare delivery, and that is the
case in mental/behavioral healthcare. As services to mental health patients have been reduced
in recent years, frequently at the state level through Medicaid cuts, a growing number of mental
health patients have been unable to obtain drug and other treatments. Their conditions have
become acute and many are admitted to hospital EDs as a response to self-destructive or anti-
social behavior. These patients may require admission to inpatient mental health facilities, but
beds at such facilities are lacking. As a consequence, an increasing number of mental health
patients are “housed” in the ED until such time as inpatient beds at mental health facilities
become available.
ED administrators surveyed indicated that this is a common occurrence at their facilities.
Eighty-six percent said they are either “sometimes” or “often” unable to transfer mental health
patients to inpatient facilities in a timely manner. Only 3% said they are always able to transfer
mental health patients to inpatient facilities in a timely manner.
For 29% of those surveyed, the longest “board time” they are experiencing with mental health
patients is 12 hours or less. However, 41% of those surveyed are seeing board times of up to
two days or greater, while 10% are seeing board times of up to one week or more.
Sixty-percent of ED administrators said that long board times for mental health patients have
compromised quality of care, in some cases for mental health care patients only and in some
cases for all patients. Long boarding times can lead to ED crowding, extended wait times and
hospital admission times for all patients. Traditionally, extended economic downturns have
increased the incidence of mental health problems and have reduced treatment resources. This
is occurring today, and the evidence of a wide-spread breakdown in mental health services is
becoming increasingly apparent in the nation’s EDs.
16
“Uncompensated care”
was ranked as “most
important” or “somewhat
important” by more
respondents than any
other factor.
EMR – A PROMISE NOT YET DELIVERED
____________________________________________________
About three-quarters of ED administrators
surveyed (73%) said their hospitals have
invested in electronic medical records (EMR)
within their hospital’s ED. Of these, the
majority (56%) indicated that their investment
in EMR to date has not been worth the cost,
while 44% said their investment has been
worth the cost.
The majority of those surveyed indicated that
EMR has not achieved objectives in several
areas. Sixty-seven percent said EMR has not
reduced patient length of stay in the ED, 69%
said EMR has not improved ED patient
satisfaction, and 67% said EMR has not reduced cost of care in the ED. By contrast, 60% said
EMR does improve the efficiency of physicians and other providers in the ED and 72% said EMR
improves overall quality of care in the ED.
Though the rating of EMR in the ED to date is at best mixed, the majority of ED administrators
indicated EMR holds potential for the future. Seventy-six percent of those surveyed believe the
return on their EMR investment will eventually be worth the cost.
REIMBURSEMENT – THE EVER PRESENT CONCERN
_____________________________________________________
ED Administrators were asked to rank the top concerns and priorities facing their EDs in the
next 12 months. “Uncompensated care” was ranked as “most important” or “somewhat
important” by more respondents than any other factor. Seventy-four percent of those surveyed
indicated that at least 11% of patients presenting to their EDs are uninsured. Large numbers of
uninsured patients are a major reason why most hospitals lose money on their EDs and why
financial considerations are a top priority for ED administrators.
The survey suggests that the majority of ED
administrators do not believe healthcare reform will
alleviate their financial challenges. Though 43%
project that their EDs will see fewer uninsured
patients due to health reform, the majority
anticipate that reimbursement to their EDs by the
primary payors will decrease. Seventy-five percent
project Medicaid reimbursement will decrease
under reform, 74% project Medicare reimbursement
will decrease, and 70% project reimbursement from
commercial insurance will decrease. Not
surprisingly, “reimbursement for services” was
ranked the second highest priority by ED
administrators, followed by “health reform,”
“shortage of nurses,” “length of patient stay,” and
“lack of specialty coverage.”
17
Hospital emergency departments in the United States bear an
increasingly large burden of responsibility for providing care to
the injured, the very ill, the uninsured and others who lack access to medical services. The
survey suggests that most hospital emergency department administrators believe the burden
will not be relieved by health reform, but will in fact be exacerbated by it. Inadequate access to
medical specialty services in the emergency department poses risks to patients, the great
majority of hospital emergency department administrators indicated, in some cases a very
significant risk. Lack of services for mental health patients is reflected in hospital emergency
departments, where many mental health patients must wait days to be transferred to inpatient
facilities. Electronic medical records have yet to yield universal dividends in the emergency
department, and ED administrators continue to be challenged by reimbursement issues,
provider shortages and the uncertainty of health reform.
CONCLUSION
For more information about this survey or about Schumacher Group, contact:
Alida Alleman | Communications Liaison
200 Corporate Blvd. | Lafayette, LA 70508 | 800-893-9698 ext. 1152
Direct Line: 337-354-1152 | Fax: 337-262-7353 | Email: alida_alleman@schumachergroup.com
www.schumachergroup.com